CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“CENSUS
RESPONSE CAN BE PART OF BROWN’S LEGACY”
There
is little doubt about it: President Trump has not forgiven California for
voting against him by a margin of more than 3 million votes, thus costing him
the bragging rights of a popular vote victory.
His
most effective, potentially long-lasting way of punishing this state comes down
to one question on the Census his administration will run starting less than 18
months from now:
Trump
and his secretary of commerce, Wilbur Ross, say they will for the first time in
60 years ask every person questioned by the Census – required every 10 years by
the U.S. Constitution – whether he or she is an American citizen.
This
question was abandoned after the 1960 Census because it led to so many obvious
undercounts of immigrants in the surveys for several decades before that.
Now
Trump wants to bring it back because he wants an undercount of immigrants,
especially in California. An undercount would be absolutely assured by the
presence of the citizenship question in part because Trump and Ross promise no
confidentiality to respondents. Anyone who admits not being a citizen would be
subject to actions by federal agencies including the often-dreaded ICE –
Immigration and Customs Enforcement.
This would surely
punish the state Trump resents most by depriving it of billions of dollars in
federal grant money all through the 2020s. If it also led to California losing
a seat or two in Congress, that too would be fitting punishment in Trump’s
obvious view.
It’s
true California’s appointed attorney general, Xavier Becerra, sued five months
ago trying to keep the question out of the Census, but that action has slim
chance for success as the Constitution says nothing about what questions the
Census should include or omit. Times change, the Founding Fathers seemed to
understand, so Census questions will, too.
If
Becerra’s lawsuit, which has been joined by other states fearing undercounts,
like New York and Illinois, were to fail, Gov. Jerry Brown or his successor
will be presented with a unique opportunity, maybe even a legacy maker.
For
if the question is included, and the governor wants California to keep getting
the full $100 billion-plus it now receives in federal support for everything
from roads to sewers to police and fire protection, the state must respond with
a big effort to convince undocumented immigrants they should participate and
not hide from Census takers when they start knocking on doors around the
nation.
That’s
because much federal money is not doled out according to how many citizens live
in a state or city or political district, but rather by how many people live
there.
That’s
critical for California because it hosts more than 3 million of the nation’s
estimated 10 million-plus illegal immigrants. Even if they can’t vote, they
still seek emergency health care, they still drive local roads and highways,
their children still attend public schools, they still use water and they still
need help after natural disasters like fires, floods and earthquakes.
All
those services are supported at least in part by federal funds drawn primarily
from income taxes, of which California has long paid more than its fair share.
Every
10 years, California mounts a loud campaign to convince illegal immigrants to
let themselves be counted. That task will be harder than ever this time because
of the citizenship question and the lack of confidentiality which has been part
of previous Census efforts.
Brown
and his successor will need to create a large agency to pursue this effort
aggressively, possibly hiring as many temporary advocates as the Census will
hire temps of its own to carry questionnaires into millions of homes.
If
the current and future governors don’t do that – and Brown needs to start
immediately – they risk an undercount that would see Californians’ tax money
that should come back here go to other states like Virginia and Tennessee and
Montana and the Dakotas, where numbers of the undocumented are minimal.
If
Brown starts a major effort right away, even though it’s not in the current
budget, he could go down in history as the man who began saving California from
Trump’s attempted non-violent vengeance – a legacy he could carry proudly the
rest of his life.
-30-
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
Email Thomas Elias at tdelias@aol.com. His book, "The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government’s Campaign to Squelch It," is now available in a soft cover fourth edition. For more Elias columns, go to www.californiafocus.net
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